Sports gambling concerns campuses during March Madness

Robert started placing bets through a friend’s illegal sportsbook in high school, and he kept using illegal books in college until he was old enough to bet legally.

At school in North Carolina, which legalized sports gambling in 2024, he, his fraternity brothers and others placed multiple bets or parlays on professional and college basketball and football games. He knows people who have run away from sizable debts, ghosting bookies for big money. And he has a friend who sold an illegal book – his roster of bettors – for $25,000.

“On a college campus, you’re going to a lot of these college football games. You’re going to college basketball games, and any game that you’re watching, you’re probably betting on it,” said Robert, whose name has been changed.

Why We Wrote This

Legal sports gambling is flooding broadcasts with ads during major sporting events like March Madness. Experts say they are concerned a younger audience of high school and college students is being drawn into gambling.

March Madness, the men’s and women’s year-end college basketball tournaments that are currently ongoing, is expected to garner a record $3.3 billion in sports bets, according to the American Gaming Association. But March is also Problem Gambling Awareness Month, and there is growing concern that the rapid proliferation of legal sports gambling is reaching an increasingly young audience.

“I would say amongst my friends and others, it’s an epidemic,” Robert contends.

There’s a shift underway among young people, “instead of being sports fans they are sports gamblers,” says Andrew Miller, associate professor for Sacred Heart University’s School of Communication, Media and the Arts.

Source link

Related Posts

Load More Posts Loading...No More Posts.